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Digital audio

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A Sony PCM-7030 digital audio recorder, part of the Danish Broadcasting Corporation's cultural heritage archive.

Digital audio is a way to capture and play back sound using numbers. It turns sound waves into numbers a computer can understand. For example, on a CD, these numbers are taken from the sound many times each second, giving us clear music and voices.

This technology changed how we make, store, and share sounds. In the 1970s and 1980s, scientists and engineers made big improvements. By the 1990s and 2000s, digital audio started replacing older ways of recording and playing music and other sounds. Now, we can easily record, edit, and copy audio using computers and other digital devices.

When sound is captured, it starts as an electrical signal that looks like the original sound wave. Special tools turn this into numbers we can work with. To play it back, other tools change the numbers back into sound we can hear through speakers. Because digital audio uses numbers, we can make perfect copies over and over again without losing quality.

Overview

Digital audio technologies help us record, change, copy, and share sounds like songs, instruments, podcasts, and sound effects. Today, we mostly get music online thanks to digital recording and compression of data. Before digital audio, we bought music on records or cassette tapes. Now, we can buy or stream music online through services like iTunes, Apple Music, Spotify, or YouTube.

Analog audio changes sound waves into electrical signals using tools like microphones. These signals can be stored on tapes or sent over phone lines or radio. But analog audio can get noisy or distorted. Digital audio, however, can stay clear and free of errors from start to finish. When we convert audio to digital, we sample it many times per second โ€” CD audio, for example, samples 44,100 times per second. This helps us keep the sound quality high.

History

Coding

Main articles: Audio coding format and Audio data compression

Pulse-code modulation (PCM) was created by a scientist named Alec Reeves in 1937. Later, in 1950, another scientist named C. Chapin Cutler made a new way to make information smaller. In the 1970s and 1980s, more improvements were made, which helped music and videos sound better.

Recording

Main article: Digital recording

Digital recording of sound started in the 1960s. Japan was the first to sell digital music in 1971. Soon, other countries started using digital recording too. By the 1980s, digital recording became very popular, especially when the CD was made. This made it easier to record and mix many music tracks together.

Telephony

Main article: Digital telephony

New technology in the 1970s made digital phone calls possible. This led to the creation of special chips that made phone systems better. By the 1990s, most phone networks used digital technology, which made phone calls clearer and more reliable.

Technologies

Digital audio is used to send audio signals over the air. Common ways to do this include Digital audio broadcasting, Digital Radio Mondiale, HD Radio, and In-band on-channel.

For recording, digital audio can be saved on special devices like CDs, DAT, Digital Compact Cassette, and MiniDisc. It can also be stored in regular audio file formats on devices such as Hard disk recorder, Blu-ray, or DVD-Audio. You can listen to these files on smartphones, computers, or an MP3 player.

Images

A digital display showing audio recording levels on a Zoom H4n recorder.
Screen capture of REAPER Digital Audio Workstation software interface
A vintage 45 record design, showing the classic vinyl format used for music.
A simple icon representing a radio receiver.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Digital audio, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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